Another case for mirror neurons running cross species:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n9APqLA2YKs
Another case for mirror neurons running cross species:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n9APqLA2YKs
Finally. A great "Happy for No Reason" clip. Rather a "Something" for No Reason ...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GcQai--9AHQ
(Thanks, Pat.)
Mainstream news. This is from ABC. Changing your life through meditation.
(Thanks, Hugh.)
Where do ideas come from?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zGt3-fxOvug&feature
(Thanks, Cheryl.)
When unpleasant sensation arises, our instinct is either to nuke it, numb ourselves, distract ourselves, run away, get overwhelmed with anxiety or crippled by doubt and fear. It's inspiring to see someone not only willing, but adept at hanging out with creatures so primordially frightening.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WK2LpUoqX6A&vq
(Thanks, Dan.)
Don't know if you've been following, but here is a live cam of an eagle's nest in Iowa. They have an infrared camera for night viewing. The chicks have hatched!
Livestream for the Decorah Eagles
I'm just back from a three day intensive at Kripalu Center and once again, the power of group practice inspires me. As it has been said, "Company is stronger than will power." Below, some powerful group energy:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=bQLCZOG202k
(Thanks, Neile.)
When I first moved into the ashram I lived in a tent for the summer. The fellow living in the tent next to me asked me if I'd like to do Dynamic Meditation. I thought, "Gee, I like meditation so if it's dynamic, all the better!"
Ten minutes later we were off in a corner of the campground next to the woods with a boombox blasting drum and synthesizer, shaking and jumping and hooting. I didn't get the connection until the movement ended and I dropped into a profound stillness.
Since then I've led countless practitioners into the experience. Rather than go into the details of it, here's a rather silly video I made explaining some of the details.
I'll be leading a daylong retreat this Saturday. More information here.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-3MulH5jl4U
Profound teachings on meditation. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hynAE-7gMOg&feature=email
Riding a motorcycle or bicycle as I did for years, I spent a lot of time and energy noticing how people see or don't see what is around them. This is an interesting optical trick and suggests that our 'blind spots' are always with us. But where? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O7jpJ12lBjg&feature=relmfu
Full Body, Empty Mind. A great article about consciously incorporating the body in our practice. From Tricycle: The Buddhist Review. The Surprising Science of Motivation. From the TEDtalks. How do we stay inspired?
(Thanks, Silvia and Flip.)
Some poet spoke about how important it is to take a 3,000 year old view. Hans Rosling has done a great job through Ted talks sharing a unique perspective on how our globe has changed in 200 years. This is his latest. Incredibly cutting edge!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jbkSRLYSojo
(Thanks, Flip.)
The mind is either a doorway to the infinite or ... something else. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PyOtt7DAOZ8&feature=channel_page&fmt=18
This week I offered a talk on "Working with Fear" and next week a talk on "Working with Pain." Fear and Pain obviously are linked and the basic approach to working with them is to cultivate loving presence. We locate the unpleasant and explore what it is like to hold our experience in nonjudgemental awareness.
I wrote a 'dharma rap' song a number of years ago that kind of sums it up:
When we live in fear
We live in reaction
We don't live full
We live just a fraction
Of what is potential
Of what could be.
When you release your fear
Then the energy's free.
A little corny, but there you go.
When we're in fear, the amygdala lights up. This little strip in the brain gets activated and we move into the classic response of fight, flight or freeze.
What calms the amygdala?
Awareness.
Just turning your attention to the fear begins to calms the whole system. This, of course, is counter-intuitive. The last thing we want to do is to pause, feel and investigate discomfort.
This is what the Buddha talked about when he said engaging into these practices is like 'swimming upstream.' When we turn in to the discomfort we can start to calm the system and begin to cultivate a state conducive to insight and new possibilities.
I'll have the talk online soon.
In the meantime, in something barely related, here's a cool video called "I Can Soothe Your Pain." While the suggestion is the singer can do this for his love interest, ultimately we can do it for ourselves.
I think the video could qualify as a "Happy for No Reason" video because he obviously loses himself in a creative flow. Being that absorbed, it's hard to imagine him not feeling happy while he's cranking out this amazing tune.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8F6EoMdn95E
Some links you might enjoy: Your Brain on Books (Scientific American)
Interesting short pieces on meditation (The Daily Brainstorm)
Video on rescuing a baby hummingbird
Commencement address from Paul Hawken
Video address by Aung San Syu Kyi , the recently released resistance leader from Burma, recently selected as "Foreign Policy Top Global Thinker of 2010".
Powerful ideas and a compelling format! 21st Century Enlightenment
[youtube]AC7ANGMy0yo[/youtube]
The Empathic Civilization
[youtube]l7AWnfFRc7g[/youtube]
(Thanks, Ellen.)
All We Can See, from NASA. All the galaxies we are aware of in one fluid shot. Clint Eastwood and David Lynch Aim to Teach 10,000 Veterans to Meditate
Though in recent classes I've been talking about the pitfalls of looking for happiness in all the wrong places, here's a cute ad called "Coca Cola for Seniors"
[youtube]9j9KWEGmq9Y[/youtube]
(Thanks to all.)
A video interview with Joseph Goldstein with a correspondent who attended a retreat at IMS. On the ABC website. Meditation is as Good As Drugs for Depression (Canadian study)
An Odyssey Through the Brain (Is that a neuropeptide in your head or are you happy to see me?) New York Times
(Thank you all.)
A sweet clip that demonstrates the many and sometimes surprising forms of compassion and relationships. [youtube]Q9OfK1HfPWg[/youtube]
(Thanks, Meredith.)